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Gamble, Robert J. (Robert Jackson), 1851-1924

LC control no.no2012000730
Descriptive conventionsrda
Personal name headingGamble, Robert J. (Robert Jackson), 1851-1924
    Browse this term in  LC Authorities  or the  LC Catalog
Other standard no.222151176
http://viaf.org/viaf/222151176
Q446101
http://www.wikidata.org/wiki/Q446101
LocatedFox Lake (Wis.) Yankton (S.D.)
Birth date1851-02-07
Death date1924-09-22
Place of birthGenesee County (N.Y.)
Place of deathSioux Falls (S.D.)
AffiliationUnited States. Congress. House
United States. Congress. Senate
United States. Congress. House. Committee on Expenditures on Public Buildings United States. Congress. Senate. Select Committee on Indian Depredations United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Indian Affairs
Profession or occupationLegislators Republican Party members (United States) Lawyers
Found inSenator from Illinois, 1911: t.p. (Robert J. Gamble)
OCLC, Sept. 29, 2011 (hdg.: Gamble, Robert J. (Robert Jackson), 1851-1924; usage: Robert J. Gamble)
Wikipedia, July 19, 2018 (Robert Jackson Gamble (February 7, 1851 - September 22, 1924) was a U.S. Representative and Senator from South Dakota. He was the father of Ralph Abernethy Gamble and brother of John Rankin Gamble, members of South Dakota's prominent Gamble family. Gamble was born in Genesee County, near Akron, New York, the son of Robert Gamble and Jennie (Abernethy) Gamble. In 1862, he moved with his parents to Fox Lake, Wisconsin. In 1874, he graduated from Lawrence University in Appleton, Wisconsin. While attending college, Gamble taught school in the summer to pay his tuition. After graduating, he studied law with the Milwaukee firm of Jenkins, Elliot & Wheeler, and was admitted to the bar in 1875. He moved to Yankton in the portion of the Dakota Territory which later became South Dakota. A Republican, he became a district attorney for the second judicial district of the Territory of Dakota in 1880, and was Yankton's city attorney in 1881 and 1882. Afterward, he went on to become a member of the Territorial council in 1885. In 1894 he was elected to Seat B, one of South Dakota's two at-large seats in the U.S. House of Representatives, and he served in the Fifty-fourth Congress. He ran unsuccessfully for reelection in 1896, but was again elected to Seat B in 1898, and served in the Fifty-sixth Congress. During the Fifty-sixth Congress, he became the chairman of the now-defunct U.S. House Committee on Expenditures on the Public Buildings. In 1901, Robert J. Gamble was elected to the United States Senate. Re-elected in 1906, he served until March 1913, after being an unsuccessful candidate for renomination. During his senate career, he was chairman of the: Committee on Indian Depredations (57th Congress); Committee on Transportation Routes to the Seaboard (58th to 60th Congresses); Committee on Indian Affairs (62nd Congress); and Committee on Enrolled Bills (64th Congress). In 1915, Gamble moved to Sioux Falls and resumed the practice of law. From 1916 to 1924 he served as a referee in bankruptcy for the southern district of South Dakota. He was a member of the National Executive Committee of the League to Enforce Peace. Gamble died in Sioux Falls, and was buried at Yankton City Cemetery in Yankton)
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